Traveling clothes

Berry Simpson —  March 25, 2010 — 1 Comment

When nephew Kevin
first joined us in January 2008, he was only five years old, and he was a very
picky eater. And not only was he a picky eater, he was a slow eater. In fact,
he was the slowest eater I’d ever shared a table with. He ate so slow it was
all Cyndi and I could to stay upright in our chairs while watching him.
Sometimes I think Kevin ate slow
because he was hoping we’d give up and fix him something else, like macaroni
and cheese with ketchup. We eventually convinced him that we weren’t going to
change the menu and he could just go to bed hungry if he didn’t like what we
were eating. Other times I think he ate so slowly because he was in some sort
of Calvin-and-Hobbes fantasy land and he simply forgot to put food in his
mouth.

During those early days together, if
you happened to eat a meal with Cyndi and Kevin
and me, you heard us urging him to hurry up and eat. “We’re not staying here
all day,” we said.

It had been my prior experience that
few kids needed to be sped up while eating. Most needed to be slowed down. Kevin was the exception in my world.

However, Kevin
is now seven years old and he has a year-and-a-half of elementary school
cafeteria lunches behind him and he no longer eats so slow. He doesn’t gobble
his food like some kids, but at least he eats quickly enough that Cyndi and I
can stay awake while we are waiting.

I thought about Kevin last week while reading from Exodus 12:11,
about God’s instructions to the Israelite people for eating their Passover
meal. It says, “Eat it in haste.” I imagined the parents telling their kids
“stop eating so slow, we can’t stay here all day.”

The Living Bible says it like this:
“Eat it with your traveling clothes on, prepared for a long journey, wearing
your walking shoes and carrying your walking stick in your hands; eat it
hurriedly …”

It is ironic that I used to long for
days with slow meals. I looked forward to the time when I would be sufficiently
grown up enough that I wouldn’t be off-balanced all the time. I would finally
get caught up. I could settle into the right job, settle into the right house
with the right dog and the right pick-up truck, using my relaxed energies to do
creative work and enjoy life. I looked forward to the day “when all this mess
would slow down and I could get caught up.”

Well, it hasn’t happened. And if I
use past behavior to predict future performance, it won’t happen any time soon.
In fact, I will probably never settle. For one thing, the settled life sounds too
boring. People living settled lives have little impact on the world around
them, and I don’t want to live a life with no impact.

And for another thing – I don’t
believe God wants any of us to live settled lives. I believe he wants us living
every day like a Passover meal, with our traveling clothes on, prepared for a
long journey. He wants us leaning forward ready to follow his lead.

So I kept reading from Exodus, up to
the point in the story after they’d been thrown out of Egypt and the chariots were bearing down on them
and they were trapped up against the Red Sea.
Moses spoke to their fears when he said, “Do not be afraid. Stand firm and
you’ll see the deliverance the Lord will bring you today.” (Exodus 14:13)

It was great advice, and even
greater leadership. Like a father of young kids saying, “Don’t be afraid. Stand
here at the curb and watch me get your ball for you.”

So how does standing firm work with
a life lived in traveling clothes? Should we be moving all the time, or
standing and waiting? Well, in Exodus 14:15, the Lord said to Moses, “Tell the
Israelites to move on.” No more waiting, time to move.

I wrote in the margin of my Bible:
“Is this conflicting advice? “Be still” and “move on” sound like mixed signals.
How can we do both?”

I think the answer is to stand still
and trust God for the big outcomes, but to move into what we know to do right
now. I must learn to wait on God while being ready to move on. Wait for God
while wearing my traveling clothes.

Rich Mullins once wrote: “I feel like
God’s leading me out, so I’m kind of sleeping with my shoes on. When God parts
the sea, I don’t want to say, “Oh rats, where are my sandals.””

 

 

“I run in the path of Your
commands, for You have set my heart free.” Psalm 119:32

To learn more about Berry’s newest book, “Running
With God:” http://www.runningwithgodonline.com/

Follow Berry on Twitter at @berrysimpson … Contact
Berry directly: berry@stonefoot.org

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Berry Simpson

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  • Mark

    One of the worst things I ever saw in my own life was when my dad retired. He dreamed of a life filled with absolutely nothing to do. For the next 17 years he lived one of the most miserable lives you can imagine. Then he was blessed with a heart attack. I say blessed because it didn’t kill him. In fact, it reinvigorated his life and he began to live again. He quit smoking, joined a gym and started hanging out with guy’s his age that had been through similar things. He spent the next 6 years loving his life and knowing what he was going to do for that day. Later, after he got lung cancer and couldn’t do anything anymore, he lamented to me many times how he wished he’d have done things differently. How he would’ve lived differently. It’s the most important lesson he ever taught me. I want my life to have meaning. I don’t want to have regrets if I get to a point in my life where I can no longer do anything.
    Thanks Berry.